Tuesday, February 15, 2022

Night Of The Prowler!

If you've ever wondered what might happen if window washers turned bad the saga of the The Prowler is for you. Hobie Brown is an unhappy young black man, a window washer, a brave and inventive young chap who seeks to improve his lot by inventing newer and safer ways to wash windows in the towers of New York City.


Designed by John Romita, the Prowler is a slick looking character and hails from a time when villainy was still operating within a human range. Taking on a Spider-Man required no more apparently than some chutzpah, a few air-jets, and a dandy set of steel claws.


Hobie turns to crime as it offers the most expedient way he can make a name for himself. He's not evil, but does show some remarkable lack of perspective when he takes on Web-head. His actions seem to end in the death of Peter Parker, but we know all along that's not the case. So in one of the shortest criminal careers on record, the Prowler hangs up his claws.


That is until he decides to be a hero and takes off after Spider-Man again, this time seeing the Wall-Crawler as a menace. Hobie is a guy trying to make his way and grasping at a way to make a difference, but he's always making a mistake it seems.


But he does look snazzy in that costume, snazzy indeed. I've always assumed the design with the full- face mask was done like the Black Panther, in order to disguise the ethnic nature of the character and so not agitate witless folks in certain regions of the country who would be unhappy promoting a new black hero. Times have changed...I hope.

Note: This post originally appeared at Rip Jagger's Other Dojo

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9 comments:

  1. But Hobie Brown had an afro which seemed to completely vanish when he put his mask on!

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  2. If I recall correctly, Hobie stands in for Spidey to help him protect his identity (without knowing it's for that purpose), but his Afro hair style would've given the Spidey mask a hell of an odd shape.

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  3. Although those Prowler issues weren't classics they have strangely always stuck in my mind. I always thought the cover to issue 79 was poorly drawn by Romita. When it was used as the cover on the UK weekly Spider-Man comic I was sure it was drawn in the UK by a staff member ( Marvel UK covers were not great at this time)

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    1. I rather like the cover but I can understand the criticism. It's a bit of a Lois Lane quality to it.

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    2. The new UK covers were drawn in the States though, McS. In fact, for the first few years, everything (even the letters pages, going by the spelling) was prepared in the US, with the UK 'editorial' team being merely 'processors'.

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  4. Left a comment earlier, RJ, before your new post - why no show?

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  5. Sorry it took me so long to answer these guys but these messages fell into my spam filter somehow.

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